50:352:225
American Literature Survey I (3)
Survey of the fiction, nonfiction, and poetry of America from colonial times to the Civil War.
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50:352:226
American Literature Survey II (3)
Survey of the fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama of America from the Civil War to the present.
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50:352:250
African-American Literature I (D) (3)
African-American literature from its origins in spirituals and blues through the "Renaissance" writers to the writings of Wright and Ellison.
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50:352:251
African-American Literature II (D) (3)
African-American literature from World War II, including fiction by Baldwin, Petry, Jones, Williams, and Killens; poetry by Hughes, Tolson, and Brooks; and promising contemporary writers.
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50:352:305
Nineteenth-Century American Poetry (3)
Selected readings in 19th-century poetry, poetics, and culture. Syllabus may include satirical, romantic, transcendental, abolitionist, Civil War, and regional poetry, as well as folk songs, spirituals, and versions of American Indian poetry.
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50:352:308
American Renaissance I (3)
Early to mid-19th-century Romantic writers such as Emerson, Fuller, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Poe, Douglass, and Jacobs.
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50:352:309
American Renaissance II (3)
Mid- to late-19th-century Romantic writers such as Stowe, Melville, Dickinson, Whittier, Harper, and Wilson.
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50:352:311
American Realism and Naturalism (3)
Readings in post-Civil War writers such as Twain, James, Howells, Crane, Wharton, Dreiser, Chopin, Chesnutt, and Dunbar.
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50:352:313
Recent American Writing (3)
Readings in American poetry, fiction, and drama since 1950.
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50:352:322
Modern American Poetry I (3)
Selected readings in modernist poetry and poetics, 1900-1950. Such authors as Pound, H.D., Eliot, Frost, Stein, Williams, Stevens, Moore, Rukeyser, and Hughes.
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50:352:323
Modern American Poetry II (3)
Selected readings in postmodern poetry and poetics, 1950-present. Such
authors as Brooks, Ginsberg, Plath, Baraka, O'Hara, Ashbery, Soto,
Rich, and Hejinian.
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50:352:325
Multicultural American Literature (D) (3)
Readings in multicultural literature of the United States--for example,
Anglo-European, African American, Asian-American, Chicano,
Jewish-American, and Native American--with emphasis on relationships
between culture and literary form, theme, and language.
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50:352:329
American Drama (3)
The development of drama in the United States, with emphasis on 20th-century themes and forms. Likely playwrights include O'Neill, Stein, Williams, Odets, Hansberry, Miller, Albee, Wilson, Kushner, and Wasserstein.
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50:352:337
American Novel to 1900 (3)
The development of the novel in America through the 19th century. Works by such authors as Rowson, Brown, Cooper, Hawthorne, Stowe, Melville, Twain, Crane, and James.
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50:352:338
Modern American Novel (3)
Readings chosen from the works of leading American novelists from Henry James to 1950.
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50:352:339
Postmodern American Novel (3)
Study of the development of the American novel since 1950. Readings in works by such authors as Pynchon, Coover, Barth, Walker, DeLillo, Reed, Morrison, Kingston, and Cisneros.
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50:352:347
The American Child in Literature and Culture (D) (3)
Literary views of childhood and youth in the context of American
nationhood, with attention to innocence, protection, violence,
diversity, and citizenship.
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50:352:348
Literature of Adolescence (D) (3)
Literary, cultural, and historical constructions of adolescence in a range of literature written for young readers.
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50:352:350
African-American Writing in Its Social Context (D) (3)
Study of works by such writers as DuBois, Malcolm X, King, and Jones, who have significantly affected the thinking and writing of contemporary African-American writers.
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50:352:391,392
Special Topics in American Literature (3,3)
A course in a specially selected topic.
Primarily, but not exclusively, for advanced students. Courses with different topics may be repeated for credit.
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50:352:393,394
Special Topics in American Literature (1-3,1-3)
A course in a specially selected topic. Satisfies the major requirement for "cross-cultural perspectives."
Primarily, but not exclusively, for advanced students. Courses with different topics may be repeated for credit.
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50:352:407,408
Independent Study in American Literature (BA,BA)
An opportunity for advanced students to work individually with an instructor on a self-determined course of study. The project culminates in a substantial paper.
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50:352:436,437
Major Writers of America (3,3)
An intensive study of the works of a single author, or of two or three related authors.
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50:352:451
Major African-American Writers (D) (3)
An intensive study of the principal works of two or three major African-American writers.
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50:352:491,492
Seminar in American Literature (3,3)
An opportunity for juniors and seniors to pursue advanced study of literature in a small-group format.
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50:352:495,496
Honors Program in American Literature (3,3)
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